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authorJosef Bacik <josef@toxicpanda.com>2020-10-09 16:28:22 +0300
committerDavid Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>2021-02-09 00:58:58 +0300
commit576fa34830afac6a40cd19c777f1ab49c914e87c (patch)
treece68bb9937f82a935af6284e47df1f071ea9096c /fs/btrfs/space-info.c
parentf00c42dd4cc8b856e68638e6a88b51f88b8e849e (diff)
downloadlinux-576fa34830afac6a40cd19c777f1ab49c914e87c.tar.xz
btrfs: improve preemptive background space flushing
Currently if we ever have to flush space because we do not have enough we allocate a ticket and attach it to the space_info, and then systematically flush things in the filesystem that hold space reservations until our space is reclaimed. However this has a latency cost, we must go to sleep and wait for the flushing to make progress before we are woken up and allowed to continue doing our work. In order to address that we used to kick off the async worker to flush space preemptively, so that we could be reclaiming space hopefully before any tasks needed to stop and wait for space to reclaim. When I introduced the ticketed ENOSPC stuff this broke slightly in the fact that we were using tickets to indicate if we were done flushing. No tickets, no more flushing. However this meant that we essentially never preemptively flushed. This caused a write performance regression that Nikolay noticed in an unrelated patch that removed the committing of the transaction during btrfs_end_transaction. The behavior that happened pre that patch was btrfs_end_transaction() would see that we were low on space, and it would commit the transaction. This was bad because in this particular case you could end up with thousands and thousands of transactions being committed during the 5 minute reproducer. With the patch to remove this behavior we got much more sane transaction commits, but we ended up slower because we would write for a while, flush, write for a while, flush again. To address this we need to reinstate a preemptive flushing mechanism. However it is distinctly different from our ticketing flushing in that it doesn't have tickets to base it's decisions on. Instead of bolting this logic into our existing flushing work, add another worker to handle this preemptive flushing. Here we will attempt to be slightly intelligent about the things that we flushing, attempting to balance between whichever pool is taking up the most space. Reviewed-by: Nikolay Borisov <nborisov@suse.com> Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@toxicpanda.com> Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'fs/btrfs/space-info.c')
-rw-r--r--fs/btrfs/space-info.c100
1 files changed, 98 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/fs/btrfs/space-info.c b/fs/btrfs/space-info.c
index e677b5451f82..8a27c193f8a8 100644
--- a/fs/btrfs/space-info.c
+++ b/fs/btrfs/space-info.c
@@ -1001,6 +1001,100 @@ static void btrfs_async_reclaim_metadata_space(struct work_struct *work)
}
/*
+ * This handles pre-flushing of metadata space before we get to the point that
+ * we need to start blocking threads on tickets. The logic here is different
+ * from the other flush paths because it doesn't rely on tickets to tell us how
+ * much we need to flush, instead it attempts to keep us below the 80% full
+ * watermark of space by flushing whichever reservation pool is currently the
+ * largest.
+ */
+static void btrfs_preempt_reclaim_metadata_space(struct work_struct *work)
+{
+ struct btrfs_fs_info *fs_info;
+ struct btrfs_space_info *space_info;
+ struct btrfs_block_rsv *delayed_block_rsv;
+ struct btrfs_block_rsv *delayed_refs_rsv;
+ struct btrfs_block_rsv *global_rsv;
+ struct btrfs_block_rsv *trans_rsv;
+ u64 used;
+
+ fs_info = container_of(work, struct btrfs_fs_info,
+ preempt_reclaim_work);
+ space_info = btrfs_find_space_info(fs_info, BTRFS_BLOCK_GROUP_METADATA);
+ delayed_block_rsv = &fs_info->delayed_block_rsv;
+ delayed_refs_rsv = &fs_info->delayed_refs_rsv;
+ global_rsv = &fs_info->global_block_rsv;
+ trans_rsv = &fs_info->trans_block_rsv;
+
+ spin_lock(&space_info->lock);
+ used = btrfs_space_info_used(space_info, true);
+ while (need_do_async_reclaim(fs_info, space_info, used)) {
+ enum btrfs_flush_state flush;
+ u64 delalloc_size = 0;
+ u64 to_reclaim, block_rsv_size;
+ u64 global_rsv_size = global_rsv->reserved;
+
+ /*
+ * We don't have a precise counter for the metadata being
+ * reserved for delalloc, so we'll approximate it by subtracting
+ * out the block rsv's space from the bytes_may_use. If that
+ * amount is higher than the individual reserves, then we can
+ * assume it's tied up in delalloc reservations.
+ */
+ block_rsv_size = global_rsv_size +
+ delayed_block_rsv->reserved +
+ delayed_refs_rsv->reserved +
+ trans_rsv->reserved;
+ if (block_rsv_size < space_info->bytes_may_use)
+ delalloc_size = space_info->bytes_may_use - block_rsv_size;
+ spin_unlock(&space_info->lock);
+
+ /*
+ * We don't want to include the global_rsv in our calculation,
+ * because that's space we can't touch. Subtract it from the
+ * block_rsv_size for the next checks.
+ */
+ block_rsv_size -= global_rsv_size;
+
+ /*
+ * We really want to avoid flushing delalloc too much, as it
+ * could result in poor allocation patterns, so only flush it if
+ * it's larger than the rest of the pools combined.
+ */
+ if (delalloc_size > block_rsv_size) {
+ to_reclaim = delalloc_size;
+ flush = FLUSH_DELALLOC;
+ } else if (space_info->bytes_pinned >
+ (delayed_block_rsv->reserved +
+ delayed_refs_rsv->reserved)) {
+ to_reclaim = space_info->bytes_pinned;
+ flush = FORCE_COMMIT_TRANS;
+ } else if (delayed_block_rsv->reserved >
+ delayed_refs_rsv->reserved) {
+ to_reclaim = delayed_block_rsv->reserved;
+ flush = FLUSH_DELAYED_ITEMS_NR;
+ } else {
+ to_reclaim = delayed_refs_rsv->reserved;
+ flush = FLUSH_DELAYED_REFS_NR;
+ }
+
+ /*
+ * We don't want to reclaim everything, just a portion, so scale
+ * down the to_reclaim by 1/4. If it takes us down to 0,
+ * reclaim 1 items worth.
+ */
+ to_reclaim >>= 2;
+ if (!to_reclaim)
+ to_reclaim = btrfs_calc_insert_metadata_size(fs_info, 1);
+ flush_space(fs_info, space_info, to_reclaim, flush);
+ cond_resched();
+ spin_lock(&space_info->lock);
+ used = btrfs_space_info_used(space_info, true);
+ }
+ spin_unlock(&space_info->lock);
+}
+
+/*
* FLUSH_DELALLOC_WAIT:
* Space is freed from flushing delalloc in one of two ways.
*
@@ -1126,6 +1220,8 @@ void btrfs_init_async_reclaim_work(struct btrfs_fs_info *fs_info)
{
INIT_WORK(&fs_info->async_reclaim_work, btrfs_async_reclaim_metadata_space);
INIT_WORK(&fs_info->async_data_reclaim_work, btrfs_async_reclaim_data_space);
+ INIT_WORK(&fs_info->preempt_reclaim_work,
+ btrfs_preempt_reclaim_metadata_space);
}
static const enum btrfs_flush_state priority_flush_states[] = {
@@ -1413,11 +1509,11 @@ static int __reserve_bytes(struct btrfs_fs_info *fs_info,
*/
if (!test_bit(BTRFS_FS_LOG_RECOVERING, &fs_info->flags) &&
need_do_async_reclaim(fs_info, space_info, used) &&
- !work_busy(&fs_info->async_reclaim_work)) {
+ !work_busy(&fs_info->preempt_reclaim_work)) {
trace_btrfs_trigger_flush(fs_info, space_info->flags,
orig_bytes, flush, "preempt");
queue_work(system_unbound_wq,
- &fs_info->async_reclaim_work);
+ &fs_info->preempt_reclaim_work);
}
}
spin_unlock(&space_info->lock);